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Who is it? Identification of different orders of insects

Community and ForumInsects identificationWho is it? Identification of different orders of insects

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05.09.2008 16:08, Vlad Proklov

good day to all.
Today I was smoking, I looked at my leg and there it is...
it tried to bite me.. can anyone tell me who it is???

http://flamber.ru/files/photos/1168338856/1186995175_g.jpg
it doesn't seem to have bitten her, but maybe she has some kind of poison that doesn't neutralize the pain???

It's a horntail, it's completely harmless.
Likes: 1

08.09.2008 8:50, guest: Виталий

Hello! Tell me, please, what kind of insects, with Latin names, preferably. Taken in Ukraine. The first is Arabatskaya Strelka, the second is near Kiev.

user posted image
http://picasaweb.google.com/xyctka/ArabatS...169183357403874

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http://picasaweb.google.com/xyctka/Almazno...515678989177778
Likes: 1

08.09.2008 8:52, guest: Виталий

I'm sorry, here's more photos of the second one. You can see even more here.

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08.09.2008 9:29, barry

VITALY:
Probably hawk moth Macroglossum stellatarum and hornet Vespa crabro.
Likes: 2

08.09.2008 14:21, Pleco

A small selection of primiptera from Tarkhankut.
16-myrmecophilus, does not sit still, so the photo is smeared.

Pictures:
picture: 14.jpg
14.jpg — (131.4 k)

picture: 15.jpg
15.jpg — (140.42 k)

picture: 16.jpg
16.jpg — (142.79к)

08.09.2008 15:02, omar

Myrmecophilus is a scaly ant, but I don't know Latin by heart. It is generally in the Crimea to fig.
Likes: 1

08.09.2008 15:04, Tigran Oganesov

15-probably from the genus Machilis or near

18.09.2008 17:01, Greenfield

Nizhny Novgorod region, Pavlovo district, late August, it was already cool.
We went to the forest for mushrooms, and these creatures just climb in bundles in my hair, by the scruff of my neck, I pulled out 6 pieces myself, my parents are also no less.
Very tenacious, it is difficult to tear them away from their clothes. The paws are strong, they crawl out of the fingers.
The wings are there, but for some reason they fall off as soon as you touch them, and as if they themselves are being thrown off.
It seems that there were similar creatures in the post at the top, but I still didn't understand from the comments what it was. No one was bitten.
These are ticks or something, please help me, I'm not an entomologist myself.
The second photo to show the approximate dimensions, it is in a lid from under a plastic bottle.

Pictures:
picture: DSC00352.JPG
DSC00352.JPG — (135.71к)

picture: DSC00345.JPG
DSC00345.JPG — (137.5к)

18.09.2008 17:04, Vlad Proklov

Nizhny Novgorod region, Pavlovo district, late August, it was already cool.
We went to the forest for mushrooms, and these creatures just climb in bundles in the hair, by the scruff of the neck, I pulled out 6 pieces myself, my parents are also no less.
[...]
Is it ticks or something, please help, I'm not an entomologist myself.
The second photo to show the approximate dimensions, it is in a lid from under a plastic bottle.

The blood-sucking fly (family Hippoboscidae) is popularly known as the moose louse.

18.09.2008 17:32, Greenfield

Thank you very much

19.09.2008 15:20, Alexander Zarodov

Who knows about wild cockroaches? wink.gif This one is Ectobius sylvestris or lapponicus. And how do they differ?

Filmed in the Moscow region on the edge of a forest.

picture: tarakan101.jpg

This post was edited by Double A-19.09.2008 15: 21

19.09.2008 15:57, Vitnaz

This one is Ectobius sylvestris or lapponicus. And how do they differ?

Ectobius lapponicus has a dark spot on the pronotum with blurred, unsharp edges, it can be close to an oval or circle, and in Ectobius sylvestris the edges of the dark spot are sharp, the spot itself often corresponds in shape to the disk of the pronotum.

This post was edited by Vitnaz - 19.09.2008 15: 58
Likes: 1

19.09.2008 16:01, Alexander Zarodov

Ectobius lapponicus has a dark spot on the pronotum with blurred, unsharp edges, it can be close to an oval or circle, and in Ectobius sylvestris the edges of the dark spot are sharp, the spot itself often corresponds in shape to the disk of the pronotum.


So this one turns out to be lapponicus?

20.09.2008 21:43, akulich-sibiria

help us identify this aphid...caught on linden

20.09.2008 22:10, Dr. Niko

Who knows about wild cockroaches? wink.gif This one is Ectobius sylvestris or lapponicus. And how do they differ?

Filmed in the Moscow region on the edge of a forest.

Wild cockroaches in the Moscow region?!! Chesslovo, I didn't even think about it... eek.gif

Guys, or maybe someone knows, to me in the Istra district in early September, hm flew to the light... caddis flies. I saw an imago for the first time in my life. What species live in the Moscow region?

21.09.2008 23:19, DerRock

Please tell me what kind of animal. Filmed in the Moscow region in September.

This post was edited by DerRock - 09/21/2008 23: 19

Pictures:
picture: __________.jpg
__________.jpg — (146.12к)

21.09.2008 23:44, Vlad Proklov

Please tell me what kind of animal. Filmed in the Moscow region in September.

Caddis fly of some sort...
Likes: 1

23.09.2008 23:51, jabenok

I ask for help in identifying mantises
P1110026: A huge animal, approx. 10 cm, flew onto the balcony. Volgograd. Taken on 29.07.08.
P1140276: The insect is approx. long. 5 cm. Volgograd region, Sredneakhtubinsky district. Taken on 31.08.08.
P1150090: A small empusen with a calf length of approx. 2 cm. Volgograd region, Sredneakhtubinsky district. Taken on 14.09.08.

Pictures:
picture: P1110026.jpg
P1110026.jpg — (134.68к)

picture: P1140276.jpg
P1140276.jpg — (136.31к)

picture: P1150090.jpg
P1150090.jpg — (185.27 k)

24.09.2008 0:11, AlexEvs

1 and 2 - Mantis religiosa
3-Empusa pennicornis (we don't have another one).
Maybe I'm wrong about something, of course...
Likes: 1

24.09.2008 1:17, okoem

1 and 2 - Mantis religiosa
3-Empusa pennicornis (we don't have another one).
Maybe I'm wrong about something, of course...

In my opinion, everything is correct.
Likes: 1

24.09.2008 9:50, AlexEvs

In my opinion, everything is correct.

Yes, I doubt that - in the second photo, after all, the female, right? And it seems like with a swollen belly, i.e. before laying. Also in August. And the size of it is 5 cm...

24.09.2008 10:22, okoem

Yes, I doubt that - in the second photo, after all, the female, right? And it seems like with a swollen belly, i.e. before laying. Also in August. And the size of it is 5 cm...

You did not carefully read the post, the dimensions there are given by eye smile.gif smile.gif smile.gifwith a ruler, no one measured them.
Fear has big eyes - where did you see a 10 cm long arrow? smile.gif

24.09.2008 11:29, jabenok

You did not carefully read the post, the dimensions there are given by eye smile.gif  smile.gif  smile.gifwith a ruler, no one measured them.
Fear's eyes are big - where did you see a 10 cm-long star? smile.gif

I understand your sarcasmsmile.gif, I really don't have a habit in the grass with a ruler to molest female praying mantises yes.gifsize by eye.
But the bride was photographed on my loggia, which is not difficult to reach with a ruler. So, according to the results of measurements, you were right: the length of the insect is 9.3-9.4 cm.
Did it bother you that the empusa nymph is pictured in mid - September? Where did it come from and why?

24.09.2008 11:59, jabenok

Cicadas from the Sredneakhtubinsky district of the Volgograd region
P1110134 Taken on 26.07.08, two others on 31.08.08.

Pictures:
picture: P1110134.jpg
P1110134.jpg — (122.16к)

picture: P1140318.jpg
P1140318.jpg — (90.2к)

picture: P1140453.jpg
P1140453.jpg — (132.3к)

24.09.2008 12:01, omar

Th-that's still too much for the pope. Wasn't the specimen preserved by chance so disproportionately large?

This post was edited by omar - 09/24/2008 12: 02

24.09.2008 12:15, jabenok

Unfortunately, it was not preserved - his cat was beaten beyond recognitionfrown.gif. I am not an expert and somehow did not think that this is an outstanding animal in size... I thought
it was a normal size. Then in nature several times met such large (see 7-8)

24.09.2008 12:56, Tigran Oganesov

Robots come in these sizes, quite. Especially females. And empusa hibernate just at the stage of the nymph, there is nothing surprising here.
Likes: 1

24.09.2008 13:39, jabenok

Robots come in these sizes, quite. Especially females. And empusa hibernate just at the stage of the nymph, there is nothing surprising here.

Thank you so much for the information!!!

24.09.2008 13:44, omar

No. 7-8 cm - this is how it should be. But 9,5 cm is too much. Isn't that right?! confused.gif

24.09.2008 14:08, Tigran Oganesov

No. 7-8 cm - this is how it should be. But 9,5 cm is too much. Isn't that right?! confused.gif

No, it's quite normal, there are also such things. But 5 cm for a pregnant female is something strange. Apparently, I ate poorly as a child wink.gif
Likes: 3

24.09.2008 17:32, AlexEvs

No. 7-8 cm - this is how it should be. But 9,5 cm is too much. Isn't that right?! confused.gif


No, female religiosa grow large, Bolivar wrote. Yes, I myself saw something similar in the Rostov region.
But the second female is somehow defective.
Likes: 1

01.10.2008 10:26, gumenuk

Moscow region, July, arrived at the light

Pictures:
picture: 000_004825.jpg
000_004825.jpg — (146.71 k)

Likes: 2

01.10.2008 11:04, Guest

Sickle-winged hemerobia (Drepanepteryx phalaenoides)
Likes: 1

08.10.2008 9:31, gumenuk

Can someone tell me what kind of niteklylka it is (genus-species)? Taken in Turkey

Pictures:
picture: ___001721.jpg
___001721.jpg — (223.59к)

08.10.2008 9:42, Bad Den

I think Nemoptera sinuata
Likes: 1

08.10.2008 9:50, gumenuk

Nemoptera sinuata, I think

Very similar, but there are differences in the pattern of the front part of the wings and the body

This post was edited by gumenuk - 08.10.2008 09: 51

11.10.2008 18:04, NakaRB

All shot in Moscow and the region
01 (Cercopis sp.)
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02
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03
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04
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05
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06
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07
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08
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09
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10
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This post was edited by NakaRB - 23.10.2008 22: 04
Likes: 1

11.10.2008 18:07, NakaRB

11 (some kind of copper coin)
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12
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13
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14 (Lepyronia coleoptrata?)
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15
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16
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17
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18
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19
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20 (Delphacidae)
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21 (Delphacidae)
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This post was edited by NakaRB - 23.10.2008 22: 02
Likes: 1

03.11.2008 2:30, Victor Titov

Perhaps it is possible to identify at least up to the genus of these caddis flies?
Photo 1-June 28, 2008, Yaroslavl region, Rostov region.
Picture: DSC02242_2.jpg



Photo 2-August 22, 2008 Yaroslavl region, Uglich district.
picture: DSC02703_3.jpg

05.11.2008 3:09, dimocritus

can you tell me if this is a common Forficula auricularia or not?
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adult
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more
http://i33.tinypic.com/2i8axlf.jpg
http://i33.tinypic.com/2yv409h.jpg
http://i33.tinypic.com/2a7ir9u.jpg
http://i38.tinypic.com/vspaac.jpg
http://i38.tinypic.com/vspaac.jpg

Kiev

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